MSI Wind PC

At the time (last October), the MSI Wind PC was the only Atom-based barebone system that you could get. Since then, Jetway and Shuttle have both produced small form-factor barebone systems capable of supporting two (and more) SATA drives.

MSI Wind PC

CPU

Intel Atom 1.6 GHz

Motherboard

MSI custom w/ Intel 945GC North Bridge, ICH7 South Bridge

RAM

pqi 1 GB DDR2 533 SO-DIMM

Data Drives

Hitachi Deskstar HDS721680PLA380
80GB 7200RPM 3.0 Gb/s SATA 8MB

Ethernet

Realtek 8111C (on board)

OS

Ubuntu Server 8.10 + mdadm + Webmin
on 2 GB USB Flash drive

Table 1: MSI Wind PC Test Configuration

Table 1 summarizes the configuation details of the NAS that I put together using the Wind PC and Figure 1 shows the box. I should note that MSI did not respond to my request for a review unit. So I ended up buying one from NewEgg.

Figure 1: MSI Wind PC

Figure 2 shows the Wind PC's innards, with the metal cage that holds the drives and front panel ports removed. The board is relatively large, with a single SO-DIMM RAM socket is at the upper right of the photo and the infamous CF slot below it. I say "infamous" because you have to disassemble the entire system to insert the CF card, since it backs up right against the side of the enclosure.

Figure 2: MSI Wind PC, drive assy removed

Figure 3 shows the Wind PC with the drive assembly in place. The cage has two bays that each hold a single drive, one 3.5", the other 5.25". I just secured one of the 3.5" SATA drives with a single screw in the 5.25" inch bay. If you want to mount the drive more securely, you'll need to invest in an adapter tray or drill a hole for a second mounting screw. The Wind PC comes with SATA power and data cables, pre-cut to reach the 3.5" and 5.25" drive bays, and mounting hardware for the drives.

Figure 3: MSI Wind PC, drive assy installed

I was going to install the OS on a CF drive. But I ended up just putting it on a USB flash drive that I plugged into one of the front ports, instead.